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Query: EC:2.7.11.22 (
cdc2
)
8,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The transcription factor E2F plays an important role in G(1) to S phase transition in the higher eukaryotic cell cycle. Although a number of E2F-inducible genes have been identified, the biochemical cascades from E2F to the S phase entry remain to be investigated. In this study, we generated stably transfected mouse NIH3T3 cells that express exogenous human E2F-1 under the control of a heavy metal-inducible metallothionein promoter and analyzed the molecular mechanism of the E2F-1-mediated initiation of chromosomal DNA replication. Ectopic E2F-1 expression in cells arrested in G(0)/G(1) by serum deprivation enabled them to progress through G(1) and to enter S phase. During the G(1) progression, mouse cyclin E, but little of cyclin D1, was induced to express, which subsequently activated
Cdk2
. Experiments using the Cdk inhibitory proteins p27, p18, and p19 proved that the activity of
Cdk2
, but not of Cdk4, was required for S phase entry mediated by E2F-1. Minichromosome maintenance proteins (MCM) 4 and 7, the components of the DNA-replication initiation complex (RC), were constitutively expressed during the cell cycle, although the MCM genes are well known E2F-inducible genes. However, tight association of these two proteins with chromatin depended upon ectopic E2F-1 expression. In contrast, the
Cdc45
protein, another RC component, which turned out to be a transcriptional target of E2Fs, was induced to express and subsequently bound to chromatin in response to E2F-1. Experiments utilizing a chemical Cdk-specific inhibitor, butyrolactone I, revealed that
Cdk2
activity was required only for chromatin binding of the
Cdc45
proteins, and not for the expression of
Cdc45
or chromatin binding of MCM4 and -7. These results indicate that at least two separate pathways function downstream of E2F to initiate S phase; one depends upon the activity of
Cdk2
and the other does not.
...
PMID:Cdk2-dependent and -independent pathways in E2F-mediated S phase induction. 1069 33
Cell cycle checkpoints lead to the inhibition of cell cycle progression following DNA damage. A cell-free system derived from Xenopus eggs has been established that reconstitutes the checkpoint pathway inhibiting DNA replication initiation. DNA containing double-strand breaks inhibits replication initiation in a dose-dependent manner. Upon checkpoint activation, a prereplicative complex is assembled that contains ORC, Cdc6, Cdc7, and MCM proteins but lacks
Cdc45
. The checkpoint is ATM dependent.
Cdk2
/CyclinE acts downstream of ATM and is downregulated by
Cdk2
phosphorylation on tyrosine 15. Cdk2AF/CyclinE is refractory to checkpoint signaling, and Cdc25A overrides the checkpoint and restores DNA replication. This report provides the description of a DNA damage checkpoint pathway that prevents the onset of S phase independently of the transcriptional function of p53 in a vertebrate organism.
...
PMID:Reconstitution of an ATM-dependent checkpoint that inhibits chromosomal DNA replication following DNA damage. 1103 Mar 44
To preserve genetic integrity, mammalian cells exposed to ionizing radiation activate the ATM kinase, which initiates a complex response-including the S-phase checkpoint pathways-to delay DNA replication. Defects in ATM or its substrates Nbs1 or Chk2 (ref. 3), the Nbs1-interacting Mre11 protein, or the Chk2-regulated Cdc25A-
Cdk2
cascade all cause radio-resistant DNA synthesis (RDS). It is unknown, however, whether these proteins operate in a common signaling cascade. Here we show that experimental blockade of either the Nbs1-Mre11 function or the Chk2-triggered events leads to a partial RDS phenotype in human cells. In contrast, concomitant interference with Nbs1-Mre11 and the Chk2-Cdc25A-
Cdk2
pathways entirely abolishes inhibition of DNA synthesis induced by ionizing radiation, resulting in complete RDS analogous to that caused by defective ATM. In addition,
Cdk2
-dependent loading of
Cdc45
onto replication origins, a prerequisite for recruitment of DNA polymerase, was prevented upon irradiation of normal or Nbs1/Mre11-defective cells but not cells with defective ATM. We conclude that in response to ionizing radiation, phosphorylations of Nbs1 and Chk2 by ATM trigger two parallel branches of the DNA damage-dependent S-phase checkpoint that cooperate by inhibiting distinct steps of DNA replication.
...
PMID:The DNA damage-dependent intra-S phase checkpoint is regulated by parallel pathways. 1185 Jun 21
The MCM2-7 complex is believed to function as the eukaryotic replicative DNA helicase. It is recruited to chromatin by the origin recognition complex (ORC), Cdc6, and Cdt1, and it is activated at the G(1)/S transition by
Cdc45
and the protein kinases Cdc7 and
Cdk2
. Paradoxically, the number of chromatin-bound MCM complexes greatly exceeds the number of bound ORC complexes. To understand how the high MCM2-7:ORC ratio comes about, we examined the binding of these proteins to immobilized linear DNA fragments in Xenopus egg extracts. The minimum length of DNA required to recruit ORC and MCM2-7 was approximately 80 bp, and the MCM2-7:ORC ratio on this fragment was approximately 1:1. With longer DNA fragments, the MCM2-7:ORC ratio increased dramatically, indicating that MCM complexes normally become distributed over a large region of DNA surrounding ORC. Only a small subset of the chromatin-bound MCM2-7 complexes recruited
Cdc45
at the onset of DNA replication, and unlike
Cdc45
, MCM2-7 was not limiting for DNA replication. However, all the chromatin-bound MCM complexes may be functional, because they were phosphorylated in a Cdc7-dependent fashion, and because they could be induced to support
Cdk2
-dependent
Cdc45
loading. The data suggest that in Xenopus egg extracts, origins of replication contain multiple, distributed, initiation-competent MCM2-7 complexes.
...
PMID:MCM2-7 complexes bind chromatin in a distributed pattern surrounding the origin recognition complex in Xenopus egg extracts. 1208 1
In eukaryotic cells, an ordered sequence of events leads to the initiation of DNA replication. During the G(1) phase of the cell cycle, a prereplication complex (pre-RC) consisting of ORC, Cdc6, Cdt1, and MCM2-7 is established at replication origins on the chromatin. At the G(1)/S transition, MCM10 and the protein kinases Cdc7-Dbf4 and
Cdk2
-cyclin E cooperate to recruit
Cdc45
to the pre-RC, followed by origin unwinding, RPA binding, and recruitment of DNA polymerases. Using the soluble DNA replication system derived from Xenopus eggs, we demonstrate that immunodepletion of protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) from egg extracts and inhibition of PP2A activity by okadaic acid abolish loading of
Cdc45
to the pre-RC. Consistent with a defect in
Cdc45
loading, origin unwinding and the loading of RPA and DNA polymerase alpha are also inhibited. Inhibition of PP2A has no effect on MCM10 loading and on Cdc7-Dbf4 or
Cdk2
activity. The substrate of PP2A is neither a component of the pre-RC nor
Cdc45
. Instead, our data suggest that PP2A functions by dephosphorylating and activating a soluble factor that is required to recruit
Cdc45
to the pre-RC. Furthermore, PP2A appears to counteract an unknown inhibitory kinase that phosphorylates and inactivates the same factor. Thus, the initiation of eukaryotic DNA replication is regulated at the level of
Cdc45
loading by a combination of stimulatory and inhibitory phosphorylation events.
...
PMID:Protein phosphatase 2A regulates binding of Cdc45 to the prereplication complex. 1218 86
We have identified Xenopus homologs of the budding yeast Sld5 and its three interacting proteins. These form a novel complex essential for the initiation of DNA replication in Xenopus egg extracts. The complex binds to chromatin in a manner dependent on replication licensing and S-phase
CDK
. The chromatin binding of the complex and that of
Cdc45
are mutually dependent and both bindings require Xenopus Cut5, the yeast homolog of which interacts with Sld5. On replicating chromatin the complex interacts with
Cdc45
and MCM, putative components of replication machinery. Electron microscopy further reveals that the complex has a ring-like structure. These results suggest that the complex plays an essential role in the elongation stage of DNA replication as well as the initiation stage.
...
PMID:A novel ring-like complex of Xenopus proteins essential for the initiation of DNA replication. 1273 Jan 33
Fission yeast Cut5/Rad4 and its budding yeast homolog Dpb11 are required for both DNA replication and the S-phase checkpoint. Here, we have investigated the role of the Xenopus homolog of Cut5 in the initiation of DNA replication using Xenopus egg extracts. Xenopus Cut5, which shows sequence similarity to DmMus101 and HsTopBP1, is essential for DNA replication in the egg extracts. It is required for the chromatin binding of
Cdc45
and DNA polymerases, but not for the formation of pre-replicative complexes or the elongation stage of DNA replication. The chromatin binding of Cut5 consists of two distinct modes. S-phase cyclin-dependent kinase (S-CDK)-independent binding is sufficient for DNA replication while S-
CDK
-dependent binding is dispensable. Further, S-
CDK
acts after the chromatin binding of Cut5 and before the binding of
Cdc45
. These results demonstrate that the chromatin binding of Cut5 is required for the action of S-
CDK
, which in turn triggers the formation of pre-initiation complexes of DNA replication.
...
PMID:Xenopus Cut5 is essential for a CDK-dependent process in the initiation of DNA replication. 1274 46
In eukaryotes, prereplication complexes (pre-RCs) containing ORC, Cdc6, Cdt1, and MCM2-7 are assembled on chromatin in the G1 phase. In S phase, when DNA replication initiates, pre-RCs are disassembled, and new pre-RC assembly is restricted until the following G1 period. As a result, DNA replication is limited to a single round per cell cycle. One inhibitor of pre-RC assembly, geminin, was discovered in Xenopus, and it binds and inactivates Cdt1 in S phase. However, removal of geminin from Xenopus egg extracts is insufficient to cause rereplication, suggesting that other safeguards against rereplication exist. Here, we show that Cdt1 is completely degraded by ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis during the course of the first round of DNA replication in Xenopus egg extracts. Degradation depends on
Cdk2
/Cyclin E,
Cdc45
, RPA, and polymerase alpha, demonstrating a requirement for replication initiation. Cdt1 is ubiquitinated on chromatin, and this process also requires replication initiation. Once replication has initiated,
Cdk2
/Cyclin E is dispensable for Cdt1 degradation. When fresh Cdt1 is supplied after the first round of DNA replication, significant rereplication results, and rereplication is enhanced in the absence of geminin. Our results identify a replication-dependent proteolytic pathway that targets Cdt1 and that acts redundantly with geminin to inactivate Cdt1 in S phase.
...
PMID:Replication-dependent destruction of Cdt1 limits DNA replication to a single round per cell cycle in Xenopus egg extracts. 1559 82
Cdc45
is required for initiation of DNA replication and fork progression, but its function in these processes remains unknown. We show that targeting
Cdc45
to specific chromosomal sites in mammalian cells results in large-scale chromatin decondensation that strongly correlates with histone H1 phosphorylation.
Cdk2
is recruited to sites of
Cdc45
decondensation, and
Cdk2
inhibitors reduce the level of decondensation. Targeting wild-type
Cdk2
, but not kinase-defective
Cdk2
, to chromatin is also effective at inducing decondensation involving phospho-H1.
Cdc45
,
Cdk2
, Cyclin A, and phospho-H1 associate with chromatin during S-phase, and
Cdc45
,
Cdk2
, and an active H1 kinase physically interact. Replicating DNA and phospho-H1 foci colocalize in vivo, and S-phase progression and H1 phosphorylation are directly related and
Cdk2
dependent. Because
Cdk2
colocalizes with replication foci and H1 regulates higher-order chromatin, we suggest a model in which
Cdc45
recruits
Cdk2
to replication foci, resulting in H1 phosphorylation, chromatin decondensation, and facilitation of fork progression.
...
PMID:Chromatin decondensation in S-phase involves recruitment of Cdk2 by Cdc45 and histone H1 phosphorylation. 1575 25
Human checkpoint kinase 1 (Chk1) is an essential kinase required to preserve genome stability. Here, we show that Chk1 inhibition by two distinct drugs, UCN-01 and CEP-3891, or by Chk1 small interfering RNA (siRNA) leads to phosphorylation of ATR targets. Chk1-inhibition triggered rapid, pan-nuclear phosphorylation of histone H2AX, p53, Smc1, replication protein A, and Chk1 itself in human S-phase cells. These phosphorylations were inhibited by ATR siRNA and caffeine, but they occurred independently of ATM. Chk1 inhibition also caused an increased initiation of DNA replication, which was accompanied by increased amounts of nonextractable RPA protein, formation of single-stranded DNA, and induction of DNA strand breaks. Moreover, these responses were prevented by siRNA-mediated downregulation of
Cdk2
or the replication initiation protein
Cdc45
, or by addition of the
CDK
inhibitor roscovitine. We propose that Chk1 is required during normal S phase to avoid aberrantly increased initiation of DNA replication, thereby protecting against DNA breakage. These results may help explain why Chk1 is an essential kinase and should be taken into account when drugs to inhibit this kinase are considered for use in cancer treatment.
...
PMID:Inhibition of human Chk1 causes increased initiation of DNA replication, phosphorylation of ATR targets, and DNA breakage. 1583 61
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